Gulf News

Indian boy builds anti-cheating system for online examinatio­ns

DPS SHARJAH PUPIL’S PROGRAM CAN CATCH IF ONE STRAYS FROM EXAM SITE

- BY FAISAL MASUDI

A12-year-old Indian student in Sharjah has created an anticheati­ng guard for online exams that alerts the school if a student is straying away from the exam site to access other websites or documents.

Aarush Rajani, a Grade 8 student of Delhi Private School Sharjah (DPS Sharjah), who is the head boy of middle school, and known for his computer skills, was recently approached by his middle school science head of department for an opportunit­y “to enhance the reliabilit­y of the online examinatio­n process by creating an anti-cheating mechanism to help the invigilato­rs”.

Fool-proof system?

Aarush, who is from India’s business capital Mumbai, soon delivered the anti-cheating system — which his school’s IT team has not been able to hack despite several attempts during testing. All such attempts failed, including shifting windows, opening new tabs, using shortcuts such as ALT+Tab or CTRL+Tab. “They were trying their best to find a loophole in my code, but the web code worked in all scenarios” and blocked cheating attempts, Aarush said.

“With this capability, invigilato­rs can now assess larger patterns that can help identify, warn repeat offenders and, in the long-run, reduce the incidence of such events,” he added.

Starting young

Aarush said he has been “attracted like a magnet” to technology since the early days of his childhood. When his parents had gifted him his first batteryope­rated car, his “first reaction was not to run it around, but turn it upside-down to open it and check what’s inside”. Aarush has been experiment­ing and learning new tech skills since then, including coding in several computer languages, including Python for artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning, as well as the Linux terminal for ethical hacking.

Earlier this month, Aarush led his school team towards winning the ‘Champions Award’ in First Lego League (FLL) Nationals 2021 contest in the UAE. Next stop is Greece, where Aarush, along with his team, will be representi­ng the UAE in the internatio­nal round of the contest later this month. FLL presents teams with real-world scientific challenges and judges their innovative concepts based on the research and potential impact.

‘Infinity and Beyond’

Aarush and the team is currently working on enhancing their project, called ‘Infinity and Beyond’, for the internatio­nal round. He did not divulge details about the project but said it was essentiall­y “a futuristic fitness system which will help a lot in these conditions” of the pandemic. He said it was “a unique combinatio­n of VR [Virtual Reality] technology with an omnidirect­ional treadmill that unlocks infinite possibilit­ies for health, tourism and leisure, amid today’s Covid challenges”.

Apart from the FLL project, Aarush has also developed ‘Foresight’ to help people of determinat­ion “commute safely”, using a mobile app and wearable technology, including hardware modules at bus stops to assist the visually impaired.

He plans to study computer science in college. His aim is to pursue a master’s degree in science from MIT (Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology) in the US, specialisi­ng in artificial intelligen­ce.

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Aarush Rajani says he has been ‘attracted like a magnet’ to technology since the early days of his childhood.
■ Aarush Rajani says he has been ‘attracted like a magnet’ to technology since the early days of his childhood.

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